Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Saudi Arabia, Russia oil has price limits

- CLIFFORD KRAUSS

Even if Saudi Arabia and other leading oil-exporting countries cut their production targets this week — as proposed, by up to 1 million barrels a day, spurning U.S. efforts to keep supplies flowing — the move is expected to barely register in global oil prices.

An output cut by Saudi Arabia and its allies will likely reinforce the growing perception that Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia and President Vladimir Putin of Russia are working closely together to manage oil markets. That is not what President Joe Biden had in mind when he visited Saudi Arabia in July, shared a fist bump with Mohammed and called for more production.

But the up to 1 million barrel cut being considered will likely amount to little more than symbolism, given countervai­ling forces in the global oil market. Global inventorie­s and spare capacity are considered to be well below the levels that would assure stability.

And by early next year, European sanctions over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine are intended to tighten, in a bid to curb Russian oil sales, and the United States is planning to stop drawing down its Strategic Petroleum Reserve.

Given those circumstan­ces, a cutback by OPEC+ — the confederat­ion of the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and several other producers, including Russia — would ordinarily put a higher price on oil. This time, however, the decrease in supply would coincide with falling demand in China and Europe.

After the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February, oil prices soared to more than $130 a barrel but have since dropped by about one-third. That is mainly because prediction­s of a sharp decline in Russian exports have so far proven overblown, China has continued to lock down once-bustling cities to stop the spread of the coronaviru­s, and the U.S. and its allies have released more than 1 million barrels a day from reserves.

“With crude oil prices off over 30% from their peak earlier this year, OPEC+ is now worried about a recession reducing demand,” said Andrew Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates, a consulting firm in Houston. And higher oil prices could increase the likelihood of such an economic downturn.

Experts question just how much OPEC+ will actually cut. Only two of the 23 countries in the group — Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates — are able to meet their current quotas.

Energy experts say whatever OPEC+ announces, it will probably translate into a supply reduction of roughly 500,000 barrels a day, or about 0.5% of global supplies.

“Not that big a deal,” said Rusty Braziel, executive chairman of RBN Energy, another Houston consulting firm. But, he added, “an OPEC+ cut will definitely impact the market, just by the signal it sends that OPEC+ stands ready to cut production to keep the price of oil from falling.”

Gyrating prices in oil markets have become familiar in recent years.

During the 2008-09 financial crisis, prices dropped to $35 a barrel from $145 in only five months. In 2014-15, as economic growth slowed, oil dropped more than 50% in nine months, to $45 a barrel.

Prices climbed again until the covid-19 pandemic hit, when demand collapsed. In a matter of hours, they briefly crashed to below zero from $18, as producers were forced to pay buyers to take oil they had no room to store.

With their economies at stake, Saudi Arabia and its allies have aimed to stabilize the market as the world slowly recovers from the pandemic. After cutting nearly 10 million barrels a day of production during the pandemic, OPEC+ gradually restored output until last month, when it announced a small decrease.

“OPEC+ wants $100 oil,” said Scott Sheffield, the chief executive of Pioneer Natural Resources Co., a major oil company in Texas. Sheffield predicted that oil would stabilize at $90 to $100 a barrel and stay there for as long as a slowing economy kept demand down.

“There will be a small increase at the pump,” he said.

After reports of a prospectiv­e OPEC+ production cut made headlines over the past weekend, the price of West Texas intermedia­te, the U.S. benchmark, rose 5% Monday and another 2% Tuesday, but remains around $85, roughly where it was weeks before the invasion of Ukraine. Brent crude, the global benchmark, is around $90.

The national average price per gallon of regular gasoline declined Monday to $ 3.81 from just over $5 on June 14, according to the AAA auto club, although it has climbed a bit in recent days.

Over most of this year, the Biden administra­tion, with limited success, urged Persian Gulf countries to pump more. While Biden has pushed to lower prices at the pump, the Saudis have been more concerned that prices are going too low and that global spare capacity is insufficie­nt at a time of global instabilit­y.

Russia wants the highest prices possible to compensate for reduced exports to Europe.

Those prices are under pressure not only by a slowing economy, but also by increased oil production in the U.S., Guyana, Brazil and other countries. Kuwait and other OPEC+ countries have been investing to expand production capacity.

Unable to prod the Saudis and its allies to produce more, the Biden administra­tion has released about 160 million barrels of crude from the strategic reserve since March. It recently extended those releases by another month.

Lawrence Goldstein, director of special projects at the Energy Policy Research Foundation, a research group in Washington, D.C., said the prospectiv­e OPEC+ action “could interestin­gly trigger a move by the U.S. to speed up the release” from the strategic reserve, which was created in large part as a buffer against OPEC’s ability to squeeze world supplies.

Such this-for-that maneuverin­g can go both ways, of course.

“OPEC+ could promise further cuts,” said Robert McNally, a former energy adviser to President George W. Bush, adding that the oil market “faces unusually large unknowns on the supply and demand sides.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States